Posted on 05/13/2006 5:09:18 PM PDT by Pokey78
THE former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has resigned himself to being sent to the gallows. I am ready to die, he told his lawyer and confidante in an interview in his Baghdad prison. I am not scared of execution. Saddam is expected to return to court tomorrow for the resumption of a chaotic trial on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity that has lasted almost seven months.
I do not attend this trial to spare my life, he said. I attend it to defend Iraq.
Saddam, who refuses all visits from his family, was talking to Bushra Khalil, a Lebanese lawyer in her forties who is now the only woman he meets. In their meetings Saddam often prefers to talk to her about poetry or international relations rather than the minutiae of the defence case.
Khalil told The Sunday Times of an intimate five-hour interview conducted with Saddam in his prison within the past few weeks.
He confided that he had no fear of death and seemed to have accepted his fate. I took the decision to die the day I tried to assassinate Abdel Karim Qasim, he said, referring to a botched coup against a former leader that forced him to flee the country in 1959. In Iraq, hanging is the customary form of capital punishment.
Khalil, who dresses immaculately in western clothes and does not wear a veil, is the only woman on the defence team. She is also brave. Since the trial began last October two lawyers acting for Saddams co-defendants have been killed. A third fled the country after an attempt on his life.
Khalil was taken from Baghdad airport to Saddams secret prison in a van with blacked-out windows. Saddam sat in a windowless hall measuring 36ft by 16ft with a guard in front of both entrances. A table and five chairs stood in the centre. The guards left and Khalil could tell the building was close to the airport as she could hear planes taking off and landing.
She found Saddam in a resolute mood. If the invasion happened again I would stay in Iraq. I was right to stay in my country with my people, he told her, explaining why he had not fled when he had the chance.
He seemed fit and well. I get on very well with my American bodyguards, he said. They are changed frequently but we get to know each other, I like them and we become friends.
An Arabic-speaking American guard confirmed Saddams comment, telling Khalil: His personality is very different from what we expected.
Khalil is highly critical of the way the trial has been managed. This court does not respect the rule of law and it is not independent, she said. The Americans are guiding the direction of the case and the decisions will inevitably be political.
As a Shiite Muslim defending a widely hated Sunni dictator, Khalil has come under heavy criticism for representing him. But she is unrepentant, claiming that Saddam in power resembled other Middle Eastern presidents with ambitions to build a strong country.
Saddam was far more interested in discussing foreign affairs with her than his own trial. Saddam said US involvement in Iraq had bolstered Iranian military ambitions, Khalil said. He believes the Iranians know the United States will not attack Iran while they are entangled in the Iraqi conflict.
According to Khalil, Saddam has been so isolated that he first saw the notorious pictures showing the humiliation of Iraqi prisoners by US guards at Abu Ghraib prison when she produced them in court in April.
I was scared as his eyes were focused so intensely on the pictures and I could see the shock on his face, she said. Khalil first met Saddam soon after the bombing of the golden-domed mosque in Samarra in February. She had wanted to talk to him about the conduct of the trial but he did not want to discuss it. Instead he was worried about the latest events.
In the second meeting we had more time and we spoke about different topics the trial, international affairs and poetry. I gave him a book by Al-Mutanabbi (regarded as one of the greatest Arab poets) and he was very happy to receive it as he had wanted to read it.
During their last meeting, Saddam told her he had written a new epic work. I didnt have time to write poetry before, the dictator said, but now I have had the time to become a poet.
FROM ODE TO IRAQ
My spirit is still standing firm and will not fall,
And in my body runs the blood of the great.
Oh Iraq you are crowned in the heart
And on the tongue you are the poem of the poets.
Oh Iraq misfortune has shaken your sword, so stand tall
And gather your strength without bearing a grudge.
hanging is too nice.
Drop him off in the middle of a city full of Kurds.
Tell him they are going to use the plastic shredder.
I'm sure he was just appalled at our lack of due process. After all, Saddam was a just and gentle ruler who would never mistreat a prisoner. (/sarcasm.)
Saddam Hussein = Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz
Proof: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minor_characters_from_The_Hitchhiker%27s_Guide_to_the_Galaxy#Prostetnic_Vogon_Jeltz
On the basis of his poetry, alone, he deserves the death sentence.
While I have absolutely no sympathy for Saddam, the woman is, of course, correct. IMO, all "war crime" trials either are, or will become, political. One very good reason to keep the USA out of the ICC.
I do not attend this trial to spare my life, he said. I attend it to defend Iraq.
No, you attend it because we found you hiding in a hole in the ground while curled up in the fetal position, you scumbag.
Give him Nikes and "JUST DO IT"
Wait until Saddam discovers he is destined to enter into a co-dependent homosexual relationship with Satan.
Good. Now we can release the official stamp...
Saddam was probably thinking "Amateurs!"
The trap below my feet will spring
My neck will snap, my body swing
There will be no need to push
It's all the fault of President Bush.
Thank you. Thank you very much.
L
LOL. Compared to him, we certainly are. And I hope it stays that way!
Well, it is a little bit.
But having seen my notion of justice continually mocked by the clinical delicacy of our much too rare and endlessly delayed executions, I am rubbing my hands together in lustful anticipation of seeing at least one real bad guy swinging from an old-fashioned rope.
Yeah, I imagine there are many millions of people who are ready for Saddam to hang.
Oohhh...they ought to hang him for that lame poem ALONE.
...once Saddam meets Mr. Hangman, the domestic insurgency (for those who choose to call it so) will measurably decline.
If my guess is correct, trial delays are indeed deadly.
.
Why did the paper find it necessary to add this little tidbit. Loose lips...
I wonder which will be the first network to announce that they've decided not to air footage of the execution out of respect for "those who might be offended by it."
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